Service is cut off on two segments of a trans-Pacific network

Damage to submarine telecommunications cables from the earthquake in Japan Friday is worse than first believed, with two segments of a trans-Pacific network out of service and at least two other cables damaged.

The western and northern segments of the Pacific Crossing-1 cable, called PC-1 W and PC-1 N, remained out of service on Monday, U.S. time. Pacific Crossing, a subsidiary of Japanese carrier NTT Communications, had a statement on its website that the company was inspecting the damage and accelerating restoration activities. The southern and eastern segments of PC-1 were still operational. PC-1 is a 21,000-kilometer fiber-optic ring that lands at two sites on the U.S. west coast and two sites on Japan's east coast. The more northern landing, at Ajigaura, is between Tokyo and Sendai, which was near the epicenter of the quake.

In addition, PacNet had reported outages on parts of its East Asia Crossing network and Korea Telecom had said that a segment of its Japan-U.S. Cable Network was damaged, according to analyst Stephan Beckert of research firm Telegeography.

There are 20 cable systems that land on Japan's coast, including both trans-Pacific and intra-Asian networks. All the damaged cables appeared to be ones that come to shore north of Tokyo, at the Ajigaura and Kitaibaraki landing stations, according to Beckert. Most of the country's cable landing stations are south of Tokyo, and networks located there don't appear to have been affected, he said in an e-mail message. All the networks with landings north of Tokyo also have landings to the south, so no system has had a complete outage, Beckert said.

However, a customer of Hong Kong broadband provider PCCW said trans-Pacific Internet speed had been slashed in the wake of the disaster.

"Access to US sites from Hong Kong incredibly slow, to the point where PCCW has a pre-recorded message in their customer service line apologizing for slow Internet service to overseas," the customer wrote in an e-mail message on Saturday morning, Hong Kong time. He added that the situation was not as bad as two years ago, after a quake in Taiwan, when overseas Internet access was cut off completely.